Project summary

The project will investigate the exposure and sensitivity of Wet Tropics plants and animals to extreme climatic events, such as heat waves, fires, flooding rain and cyclones. This information will be used to assess and map the vulnerability of species in the Wet Tropics Bioregion and the impact of current and future climatic events on biodiversity in the region. The information gathered in the Wet Tropics can potentially be applied to other regions in Australia and elsewhere to predict and mitigate the impacts of extreme climatic events on biodiversity.

Wet Tropics thermal exposure

Spatially-explicit examples of thermal extremes' exposure in the Wet Tropics at the landscape scale.Left: The absolute maximum daily Tmax;centre: the 95th percentile of daily Tmax;right: the mean length of consecutive days above the 90th percentile.

An example of an accurate high-resolution map of the temperature extreme exposure of a key representative Wet Tropics animal species. It shows the occurrence records of the green ringtail possum (Pseudochirops archeri) (black dots) overlaid on a map of the annual probability that the maximum temperature in the possum’s preferred microhabitat (i.e. canopy) exceeds 30 C for more than 5 hours per day for more than 4 consecutive days (a critical thermal regime for the possums - Krockenberger et al 2011). Right: Plot showing that the species is found almost exclusively in locations where the temperature in the canopy does not exceed this critical thermal regime.

Why this research is needed

Understanding the ecological responses to extreme climatic events is paramount for predicting the impacts of climate change on natural ecosystems and for preserving the unique plants and animals of the Wet Tropics ecosystems in this century and beyond.

Research user focus

The project will deliver outcomes that are useful to a range of stakeholder organisations, including state government agencies, the tourism sector and conservation planners/managers. Research-user organisations identified include the Wet Tropics Management Authority, Queensland Department of Environment and Heritage Protection and Terrain NRM.

Outcomes

The work carried out in this project will provide a framework for assessing the impacts of extreme climatic events on natural systems of the Wet Tropics and elsewhere.

Outcomes will include:

Accurate high resolution maps of the exposure to temperature extremes already being experienced;

Accurate estimates of the sensitivities of organisms to temperature extremes

Identification of areas where biodiversity is currently most vulnerable to temperature extremes (‘thermal hotspots’)

Identification of areas where biodiversity is least vulnerable to temperature extremes in the future (‘thermal refugia’)

A list of biodiversity values particularly at risk from extreme events

Photos

Datasets

This project investigates in detail the exposure and sensitivity of Wet Tropics animals to extreme climate and weather events, such as heat waves, fires, flooding rain and cyclones. This information will be used to assess and map the vulnerability of biodiversity to the impacts of current and future extreme events in the Wet Tropics bioregion. The information gathered in the Wet Tropics can potentially be applied to other regions in Australia and elsewhere to predict and mitigate the impacts of extreme climatic events on biodiversity.